Brand Stretch: How Alcohol Brands Are Pushing Marketing Boundaries

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Brand Stretch: How Alcohol Brands Are Pushing Marketing Boundaries Brand stretch: How alcohol brands are pushing marketing boundaries other merchandise. Whilst this may seem harmless enough, international research suggests that, where tougher rules regarding alcohol marketing are implemented, brand extension strategies may be an effective means by which alcohol companies can bypass them. Growth of the alcohol brand “Brands allow the consumer to shop with confidence, and they provide a route map through a bewildering variety of choices... (Those) brands with strong equity embed themselves deeply in the hearts and minds of consumers.” Tom Blackett, Intrabrand2 Introduction A brand is the name, usually a trademark, of a “The growing complexity and multifaceted product or manufacturer, or the product identified nature of contemporary alcohol marketing by this name. Its purpose, in a nutshell, is to help reflects a shift in the role of brands and the product and/or company to which it belongs a departure from traditional advertising differentiate itself from its competitors. approaches... One manifestation of this approach to marketing is the phenomenon The commercial use of brands developed during of ‘brand stretching’... (which) not only adds the industrial revolution of the eighteenth and to the reach and visibility of a brand, but also nineteenth centuries, and many of today’s enables marketers to circumvent advertising famous consumer brands, like Coca-Cola, Bass restrictions.” beer, Quaker Oats, Kodak, Heinz and Prudential Insurance, originate from this time.3 However, Australian Medical Association1 it was probably during the period following the Second World War where the growth of brands This briefing considers how alcohol companies link really took off,4 and they have now become an their brands to non-alcoholic products to extend integral feature of our everyday lives. their marketing reach. A number of major drinks manufacturers have put their brand names on Many alcohol brands have become very much products as diverse as ice creams and umbrellas, embedded in the UK environment. Many of the and some clearly see such brand extensions as best-selling alcohol brands, such as Smirnoff, an alternative means to get their marketing into Bacardi, Budweiser, Stella Artois and Blossom Hill, consumers’ homes, for example via food tie-ins are now very familiar to most adult consumers. and by persuading customers to act as walking However, recent research conducted in Wales has advertisements through branded clothing and Alcohol Concern Cymru Briefing Brand stretch: How alcohol brands are pushing marketing boundaries Alcohol Concern Cymru Briefing shown that children as young as ten are also Extending the brand familiar with many alcohol brands.5 The study, which was conducted with 400 ten and eleven “...in today’s climate, with wafer-thin year old school children, found that nearly four margins, low brand loyalty, anti alcohol fifths (79%) recognised the brand Carlsberg as campaigning and rapidly changing an alcoholic beverage, a higher proportion than consumers tastes, the role of brand those who recognised brands for food products extensions has never been more important.” more commonly associated with children, The Grocer magazine9 namely Ben and Jerry’s ice cream and Mr Kipling cakes. A related marketing approach used by High recognition is potentially advantageous companies to potentially grow sales of their to drink companies, given that it is generally products and increase consumer awareness accepted in the marketing world that brand of the brand is ‘brand extensions’ or ‘brand preference begins before purchase behaviour stretching’. This is a strategy that is well- does,6 meaning that when individuals are either known in the marketing world, but the extent able or old enough to acquire alcohol, they will and impact of brand extensions specifically likely reach for brands that are familiar to them by alcohol companies has received little or about which they have positive feelings. consideration to date. This familiarity has been achieved by the Brand stretching can be achieved through two development of an increasingly sophisticated means. The first is through line extensions, set of marketing techniques by which alcohol whereby the brand name is applied to a product companies seek to build awareness and value in one of the company’s existing categories – in of their brands. Television, radio and cinema other words, products that are variations on advertising remain a key media through which the same brand in the same category.10 Line this is achieved, however in recent years extensions have been around for a long time, there has been a noticeable shift away from with a classic example being Coke introducing traditional forms of direct advertising to ‘below a sugar-free alternative, called Diet Coke, in the line’ activities, such as competitions, the early 1980s. A more recent example is promotions, celebrity endorsements, product Starbuck’s development of a premium coffee placements and sponsorships, with a particular liqueur.11 focus on social media accessed online and on 7 It has been estimated that more than half of mobile phones. Research suggests that many young people, in particular, do not recognise all new products introduced each year are line 12 alcohol promotion via such mediums as extensions. Their popularity is, in part, due to ‘marketing’, yet the messages being conveyed the perceived lower risks and promotional costs to them likely shape their drinking behaviours associated with new product development, in once they have entered adulthood.8 that consumers’ buying decisions are already influenced by the familiarity and trust they 2 Brand stretch: How alcohol brands are pushing marketing boundaries Alcohol Concern Cymru Briefing might have with the parent brand, which is then The idea behind category extensions is that extended to the new product.13 brand associations and attitudes are transferred from the well-established, parent brand to In the alcohol beverage industry, there are the new extension product.15 They also help numerous recent examples of line extensions build brand equity, that is, the commercial in the beer category. Brands have introduced value of having a well-known brand name, and lower calorie or ‘light’ beers as an extension to are thought to encourage purchases of other their core sellers – see Bud Light, Miller Lite and products from the company.16 Coors Light – and new citrus-flavoured beers such as Carling Zest, hoping to win appeal Whilst brand extensions of this type are in the female market. Similarly, and likely in commonplace, there is a debate in the response to the UK Government’s decision to marketing world as to their effectiveness, reduce duty on lower strength beers, extensions and consequently they can be considered into lower-alcohol varieties have also appeared, risky. Such a strategy can cause erosion of Carling C2 (2% abv) and Carlsberg Citrus the core brand, in that the new product might (2.8% abv) being two recent examples. Such simply attract existing customers away from line extensions have contributed to increased the original, or might insinuate that the core profits: according to The Grocer magazine, brand has problems – for example, a low fat 10.4% of Jack Daniel’s’ overall brand growth version might imply that the original version is in 2012/13 was entirely a consequence of high in fat.17 The brand extension also needs its recent launch of Jack Daniel’s Tennessee to fit with the core brand: Reis and Reis (1998) Honey.14 provide an example of how, in the US in 1990, Coors launched spring water under its However, it is the second means of brand brand name that was discontinued within two stretching, namely category extensions, years, presumably because consumers do not which is of most interest. This occurs where associate the qualities of drinking water with the the company applies an existing brand name characteristics of beer.18 Nevertheless, there is to a new product category. There have, again, evidence that successful category extensions been many examples of this practice. Perhaps generate an average 5% increased return to the best known is Virgin, which has extended shareholders,19 thus we perhaps should not be from music recordings into airlines, radio surprised to learn that at least some alcohol stations, beverages and financial services; other companies continue to pursue extension examples include Caterpillar extending from strategies. heavy machinery into clothing and shoes, Ikea extending from furniture to hotels, and Yamaha One obvious means to stretch the brand is offering motorbikes and sports equipment in through alcohol-branded merchandise (ABM), an extension to its original musical instrument and products including T-shirts, jackets and business. baseball caps bearing an alcohol brand name or logo, as well as branded glasses and mugs, have been widely available in the UK for some time. ABM continues to form a part of alcohol 3 Brand stretch: How alcohol brands are pushing marketing boundaries Alcohol Concern Cymru Briefing companies’ marketing strategies: media reports in 2013 suggest that Heineken is in the early stages of building its “first global ecommerce hub” which it plans to use to sell branded products, such as clothing and glasses, to customers, as part of “a wider push to identify the direct link between its marketing and sales.”20 AB Inbev, whose brands include Stella Artois and Budweiser, has outlined similar plans.21 Consumers’ ownership of ABM has a clear impact on their drinking behaviour, most In order to assess the extent, in Wales, of notably amongst youth consumers. Evidence category extension products by alcohol shows that young people who own ABM are companies, Alcohol Concern Cymru undertook significantly more likely to have initiated drinking some informal research, consisting of than peers who do not own such items, with researchers identifying and purchasing such the authors of one recent study concluding that products from supermarkets located in Cardiff the association between ownership of ABM and and online retailers, in December 2013.
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